Nigeria may have spent about $25bn on the four refineries in 25 years.
Last month, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) declared that Nigerian refineries are damaged beyond the regular Turn Around Maintenance (TAM).
The national oil firm also
attributed the prolonged neglect of rehabilitating the refineries to the delay
in making them functional.
Speaking on the third day of the virtual Oil Trading and Logistics (OTL) Africa Downstream Expo 2020 themed “Petroleum Refining Trends and Outlook for Tomorrow’s Energy Supply,” the Managing Director of the Kaduna Refining and Petrochemical Company (KRPC), Ezekiel Osarolube, said the NNPC had yet again begun the rehabilitation of all the facilities.
“There’s a difference between
turnaround maintenance and what we are doing now. The traditional TAM, which
the whole world knows is usually statutory, which is done two to three years,
is to open and clean the system,”
“But because of the long neglect, we
have gone beyond that level of turnaround. What we are talking about now is
comprehensive rehabilitation, which will involve replacing very obsolete
equipment that can bring the plants back to optimum performance.”
Mr Osarolube’s remarks bring to the
fore yet again debates on the poor state of Nigeria’s refineries and its effect
on the nation’s oil industry.
For decades, the refineries have
performed below optimal levels despite the huge resources earmarked for their
rehabilitation. This has resulted in importation of petroleum products for
domestic use for many years, with the nation recording loss of huge resources
in the process.
Moribund Refineries
Nigeria has four refineries linked
by a network of pipelines and depots located across the country. The four are
located in Kaduna, Delta and Rivers states.
The Port Harcourt Refining Company
(PHRC) is made up of two refineries located at Alesa-Eleme, Rivers State,
commissioned in 1965 and 1989. While the older refinery has a refining
nameplate capacity of 60,000 barrels per day, the other has refining capacity
of 150, 000 barrels per day.
The Kaduna Refinery and
Petrochemical Company (KRPC) is located in Kaduna state, with a nameplate
refining capacity of 110, 000. The Warri Refinery and Petrochemical Company
(WRPC) is located in Warri, Delta State.
Earlier in the year, the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) released the March edition of its monthly
operational data which showed that the nation’s four refineries were performing
at 5.55 percent of their combined nameplate capacity of 445,000 barrels per
daily (bpd).
A breakdown of the data showed that
the refineries continued to record deficit, with losses rising to N16.03b.
Details showed that in March, the Kaduna Refinery recorded a deficit of N5.09b;
Port Harcourt, N5.37b; and Warri, N5.56b.
Port Harcourt Refinery
Meanwhile, the combined revenue
projection for the refineries was N7.7b.
Last June, the NNPC published its
first audited financial statements after 43 years of its operation, with
damning revelations.
The annual reports and financial
statements for the year ended December 31, 2018, were for 20 of the state-owned
national oil company’s subsidiary companies operating within and outside the
country.
The companies covered in the reports
published in the corporation’s website last Friday included the Nigerian
Petroleum Development Company (NPDC), Warri Refining & Petrochemical
Company Limited (WRPC), Port Harcourt Refining Company Limited (PHRC), Kaduna
Refining & Petrochemical Company (KRPC), and Integrated Data Services
Limited (IDSL), Nigerian Products and Marketing Company Limited (NPMC),
Nigerian Pipelines and Storage Company (NPSC).
The financial statement showed, for
instance, that Kaduna Refining and Petrochemical Company Limited (KRPC)
generated no revenue in 2018, even as it incurred an operating loss of N64.5
billion, throwing up concerns over the continued operation of refineries by the
corporation.
Details showed that Kaduna refinery
spent N24 billion in direct costs to record zero revenue and an operating loss
of N64 billion for 2018, as against N2 billion naira revenue and N112 billion
losses in 2017.
A breakdown of the direct costs and
administrative expenses showed that it incurred N447.7 million in Training
Expenses, Security expenses of N230 million, Communication expenses of N37.3
million, and Consultancy fees of N843 million.
For the Warri Refining Company, the
audited financial statement showed that the company earned N1.98 billion as
revenue while it incurred N12.74 billion as cost of sales, resulting in a gross
loss of N10.57 billion and an operating loss of N45.39 billion.
The Port Harcourt Refining Company
recorded total revenue of N1.45 billion in 2018 with expenses of N24.04
billion, resulting in a gross loss of N22.58 billion.
At the Kaduna Refinery, a breakdown
of the payments made to directors showed that total employee cost was put at
N23 billion in 2018, compared to N27 billion in 2017. These payments include
salaries and wages, death benefit, administrative expenses, etc.
With regard to directors’
remuneration for 2018, excluding pension contributions and certain other
benefits, the figure was put at N109 million, as against N249 million in 2017.
Similarly, in 2018, the highest-paid
director earned N33 million.
Multi-million dollar TAM exercises
wasteful?
Revelations from the NNPC’s annual
report questioned the rationality of sustaining the running of the refineries
with huge resources without commensurate value in oil refining.
Although figures on the actual
amount Nigeria has expended on Turn Around Maintenance of the refineries have
been a subject of controversies, the nation may have spent about $25bn on the
refineries in 25 years, according to a report in BusinessDay.
NNPC Towers: P&ID and the
Petroleum ministry signed the contract here
In January, the Nigerian Senate
agreed to probe the NNPC over the $396m expended on Turn-Around Maintenance of
refineries in the country between 2013 and 2015.
The senate also mandated the
committees on Petroleum Downstream, Upstream, and Gas to carry out
investigation on the expenditure incurred by the nation within the period.
The decision to investigate
spendings on the maintenance of refineries by the NNPC was reached after
consideration of a motion brought to the floor by Yusuf Yusuf, a senator.
Mr Yusuf had noted that the
refineries were established to adequately supply and serve the needs of
Liquefied Petroleum Gas, Premium Motor Spirit, Dual Purpose Kerosene,
Automotive Gas Oil, Low Pour Fuel Oil, High Pour Fuel Oil and Aviation Turbine
Kerosene for both local consumption and exports.
However, he said the refineries had
not served the purposes for which they were built and being run.
“The country through the NNPC has in
the past 25 years, spent billions of US dollars in Turn-Around Maintenance of
the refineries, the latest being over $396m spent between 2013 and 2015 without
meaningful result,” he said.
“The refineries have remained in the
moribund state in the last 15-20 years and is almost reaching total collapse
due to lack of proposer maintenance of the facilities with a poor average
capacity utilization hovering between fifteen percent and twenty-five percent
per annum.
“Despite the huge spending on
turn-around Maintenance of refineries, NNPC recently announced a cumulative
loss of N123.25 bn in 10 months (January to October 2019). This has put the
total revenue of facilities at N68.82 bn, while total expenses incurred were
N192.1bn within the same period.
“Such huge wastage and slippages
amidst the nation’s tight economy, if not addressed, may lead the country back
to recession.”
In January, the immediate past GMD
of NNPC, Maikanti Baru, alleged that the country’s refineries have not
undergone any TAM for an aggregate of 42 years. By implication, funds allegedly
approved for the maintenance of the refineries may have ended up in private
pockets.
The position of the committees
mandated by the red chamber remains unclear as of press time but the recent
declaration by the corporation seems to show that the nation has a long way to
go in fixing the refineries.
In July 2019, while speaking at a
valedictory session for the former Group Managing Director of NNPC, Mr Baru,
the Group Managing Director (GMD), Mele Kyari, said he would fix the four
refineries before the end of May 2023.
Stakeholders in the industry have,
however, expressed reservations over the promise, as similar promises have been
made by officials in the past, which they failed to fulfill.
But Mr Osarolube explained in
October that there is a private-public arrangement in the revamping of the
refineries that would ensure that they are back on stream.
“The first phase of this project is
to raise capacity and second phase is to upgrade and modernise to meet current
trends; so, we need time to get there,” he said.

No comments:
Post a Comment